Moving this to the new Blog - June 6, 2010
Check out the blog: here
I'd like to see how far i could kick my external drive
My external hard drive has been reformatted and i may have to start the digitizing process over again. I either have to pick through the clips i managed to save and try to guess which parts are missing or start over. Starting over doesn't sound fun.
I think i'll move forward and continue digitizing new tapes on my newly formatted drive. I was hoping to have a new Natian teaser to drum up curiosity but nay!
Stay tuned if you care to catch a glimpse of the How To Brew documentary in progress.
My external hard drive containing most of my raw footage of the doc decided not to appear on my computer. The good news so far is that the data is intact, however, i cannot remove some of the larger capture files.
Pray, project, and wish me luck as i work to save weeks worth of work.
I just received confirmation that Dylan will participate in the documentary which is very exciting for the project. Check out their interesting history:
Captured by Porches: A Story of the Little Brewery that Could
Dylan Goldsmith discovered he had a passion for brewing beer while living in Portland, Oregon as a part-time worker and student. He discovered the joy of brewing through his love of cooking, baking, inventing new recipes and figuring things out. Brewing beer was just a natural step in the progression of learning for him.
The first beer that he brewed was an IPA. The second batch was good enough to encourage him to continue. As his pallet expanded, he tried out new styles: Amber, Porter, Stout. He continued reading and re-reading Charlie Papazian's New Complete Joy of Homebrewing, and soon progressed to all-grain mashes in order to brew styles impossible with extract: HefeWeizen, Oatmeal Stout, Roggenbier (Rye), Belgian Wit. Dylan's approach to brewing is a culmination of his fascination with chemistry, his enjoyment of cooking, and his OCD-like need to improve.
When he found pieces of large stainless equipment at garage sales or craigslist, he bought them and either used them for his homebrews or stored them for future use. Five gallon batches brewed alone evolved into fifteen and twenty gallon batches brewed with friends, and in the garage a 75 gallon stainless dishwashing machine shell and two 40 gallon kettles gathered dust and waited.
In early 2007, Dylan sent out a bulletin asking to rent someone's garage for homebrewing purposes. The most interesting response came from Clinton Street Brewing, who needed a brewer.
Dylan took out the larger, unused equipment from the garage and began merging it with the existing brewing setup at Clinton Street. Within a few months, he was producing at Clinton Street.
Dylan still had his dream of having his own brewing company. In mid-December of 2007, on a crazy whim, Dylan and Suzanne moved out of their home and into a gas station that they dreamed would become their own brewery. Sleeping in a short bus in the garage of the gas station, showering at the YMCA and doing their laundry at the local Laundromat, Dylan, Suzanne and family spent two months freezing their butts off in this space, all the while paying rent and fixing it up. Finally, two months later, they were able to afford to move into a small duplex in Scappoose, Oregon while continuing to pay rent on the future brewery space/revamped gas station.
After paying $800 a month on this space for 7 months (yikes!), it became clear to both Dylan and Suzanne that the City of Portland and ODOT were going to make the process of opening a brewery very difficult and very expensive. Unable and unwilling to meet all of these conditions, the couple decided to set their sights on St. Helens which was much closer to their home in Scappoose. In their search for a new brewery space, they found many interesting buildings with affordable leases in the area known as "Historic St. Helens".
To make a long story short, Dylan and Suzanne found their place in St. Helens – right next door to a pizza place (Plantation House Pizza) that plans to have them contract-brew their very own house beer. The warehouse that Captured by Porches will inhabit and is presently fixing up is about 2000+ square feet. Thanks to the support of friends and family, artists, designers, contractors and workers that have helped us along the way, Captured by Porches Brewing Company is finally set to become its very own brewery as of early January, 2009.
Courtesy of CbP
If you haven't see it yet, watch Oregon beer history short from Oregon Experience series from OPB, Beervana.
A wonderful film about a group of guys exploring the microbreweries of America on "their 40 day, 38 brewery journey as they tour breweries and brewpubs".
Buy a copy of the DVD and watch the trailer for American Beer.
IPA
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